Pubdate: Wed, 11 Jul 2007
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2007 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Steve Chawkins, Times Staff Writer
Cited: Measure P http://www.taxandregulate.org/sb06/Fulltext.htm
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Marijuana - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

JUDGE REJECTS LAWSUIT OVER POT

Santa Barbara Loses Its Fight Against a Statute That Makes the 
Private Use of Marijuana by Adults the City's Lowest Crime-Fighting Priority.

A Santa Barbara judge has upheld a city ordinance requiring police to 
make enforcement of marijuana laws their lowest crime-fighting priority.

Although Measure P, which was approved by 65% of the city's voters 
last November, does not decriminalize marijuana, it will further 
reduce the already infrequent arrests of adults possessing small 
amounts of marijuana.

The ordinance requires officers to fill out extra paperwork on 
marijuana offenses and establishes a seven-member commission to 
monitor the department's compliance with the law.

The law is similar to those passed in at least 10 other cities in the 
U.S., including Oakland, San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Santa Monica and 
West Hollywood.

After Measure P passed, the city of Santa Barbara sued one of its 
chief proponents, local activist Heather Poet, claiming that the 
measure she backed was unconstitutional. But on Tuesday, Superior 
Court Judge Thomas P. Anderle threw out the city's suit, ruling that 
Poet had done nothing wrong and that the measure was "a proper 
legislative enactment."

Santa Barbara City Atty. Stephen Wiley said he was uncertain whether 
the City Council would appeal the ruling. Some city officials and the 
Santa Barbara Police Department opposed Measure P, saying it was a 
burden on officers and created a needless layer of city bureaucracy.

The city's lawsuit was the first substantive legal challenge to such 
laws, according to Adam Wolf, an ACLU attorney who represented Poet.

"It's a resounding victory for free speech and the democratic 
process," Wolf said. "It affirms the fact that communities across 
America can tell their local police departments that they should be 
focusing on serious crime, not on low-level drug offenses."

The judge rejected the city's claim that state and federal drug laws 
made the local measure invalid. "Police officers can still arrest 
those who violate drug possession laws in their presence," Anderle 
wrote in his ruling. "The voters have simply instructed them that 
they have higher priority work to do."

After Poet was sued, she countersued, citing a state law intended to 
quash litigation known as strategic lawsuits against public 
participation, or SLAPPs. The law is intended to stop large 
organizations from silencing critics by filing lawsuits of questionable merit.

Poet was within her rights, the judge wrote in his ruling.

"All that the city has alleged and all it appears that defendant has 
done is engage in the initiative process," Anderle wrote. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake